FPA-based
infrared thermography as applied to the study of cutaneous perspiration and
stimulated vascular response in humans.
Source
Institute of Semiconductor Physics, Russian
Academy of Sciences, Siberian Branch, Novosibirsk. bgv@isp.nsc.ru
Abstract
This review gives an
overview of focal plane array (FPA)-based infrared (IR) thermography as a
powerful research method in the field of physiology and medicine. Comparison of
the gained results with the data previously obtained by other authors with
other research tools is given. Outer thermoregulatory manifestations displayed
by the human organism subjected to whole-body heating (sauna bath) and physical
loads (exercise bicycling) are quantitatively analysed. Some details of human
body emotional sweating (psycho-physiological effect) are reported. Particular
attention is paid to studying active sweat glands as individual objects. All
experimental data were obtained with the help of a high-sensitivity (0.03
degrees C) fast 128 x 128 InAs IR detector-based thermal imaging system
operating in the short-wave spectral region (2.5 to 3 microm) and perfectly
suiting medical purposes. It is shown that IR thermography makes it possible to
overcome limitations inherent to contact measuring means that were
traditionally used before in thermal studies. It is also shown that
heterogeneous thermograms displayed by organisms with disturbed inner
equilibrium can be quantitatively analysed in terms of statistical parameters
of related surface-temperature histograms, such as the mean temperature and the
standard deviation of temperature (SDT). The increase and the decrease in SDT
turned out to be typical of prolonged physical load and subsequent relaxation,
and of external whole-body heating, respectively. Explanation of this result
based on a hypothesis advanced within the context of the doctrine of
human-organism evolution is given. Skin-temperature distribution function
accompanying the relaxed organism in normality was found to closely resemble
normal-distribution function. Symmetry break down and variation of the shape of
this characteristic may serve as an indicator of homeostasis shift and can be
used as a quantitative criterion for the latter. A new phenomenon, stable punctate
hidrosis, is discovered and described. The term sweatology is introduced to
refer to the discussed specific research area in biomedical science.
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